Donuts Vinyl is just right

I bought a vinyl for Donuts at Rough Trade NYC yesterday. Got home today really excited to hear it and when I put it in I realized that it was playing pretty slow, and the pitch was down because of that. This has happened with my record player before where the speed/pitch goes slow every once in a while but I had just fixed it recently so it shouldn't have happened so soon. I was too lazy so I didn't really bother to go through the whole process of changing the speed and just kept the record playing. I realized though when I flipped the record to side B, it was a little hard to get the hole in the middle of the vinyl to fit into the little peg. I realized that that's why it's playing so slow - the hole is so small that it's causing friction while rotating and is just going slower. I tried speeding up the RPM like crazy to maybe increase the size of the hole but that only worked a little bit.

I was wondering if anyone else who had Donuts on vinyl had this problem? This isn't the first problem I've had with the manufacturing of Stones throw vinyls, because I have the Madvillainy instrumentals vinyl too and when I got it I saw they tried to fit the two records of the instrumentals in one sleeve , which doesn't really fit well at all, and it ended up damaging the sleeve a little bit from trying to fit both record in one sleeve.

better to have the hole too tight than all loose and worn, then it tends to play off center and depending on the music and the severity of the spindle wear can make the music sound warped, just use something to spin around inside the hole and scrape at the sides, i use my 45 adapter to do it with 45s that are too tight all the time, do a little at a time and keep tryin to put it on til it goes on nice

and 2 records in one sleeve is nothing new or uncommon, not ideal, but those came in blank black sleeves anyway, use a loose one from a record you have that you don't care about to house the second disc if you want to, or buy one from a local shop for like 50 cents or so, i have the instrumentals too and they have kept fine in the single sleeve they came in

I was too lazy so I didn't really bother to go through the whole process of changing the speed and just kept the record playing. I realized though when I flipped the record to side B, it was a little hard to get the hole in the middle of the vinyl to fit into the little peg. I realized that that's why it's playing so slow - the hole is so small that it's causing friction while rotating and is just going slower.

This should never be the case as the spindle ("little peg") should spin with the platter. Most new records should fit very snug on the spindle! You must own a poor build turntable if the spindle is stationary against a rotating platter. Just think about it for a minute...